《Predicting Labor-Force Participation Among Work-Able Public Housing Residents》

打印
作者
Atticus Jaramillo;William M. Rohe;Michael D. Webb
来源
来源 HOUSING POLICY DEBATE,Vol.31,Issue.2
语言
英文
关键字
作者单位
a Department of City and Regional Planning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA;a Department of City and Regional Planning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA;b Center for Urban and Regional Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
摘要
Critics of U.S. public housing often argue that the program discourages nonemployed residents from looking for work, yet little research has actually explored how public housing residents make decisions about whether to look for work. Thus, this article explores what factors distinguish nonemployed residents who are in the labor force (actively looking for work) from those who are out of the labor force (not actively looking for work). Relying on a sample of nonelderly, nondisabled public housing residents from Charlotte, North Carolina, we find that nonemployed residents who were older and showed signs of depression were more likely to be out of the labor force. In contrast, residents who were younger, had previously completed jobs training, or had some college education were more likely to be in the labor force. These findings suggest that health, education, and life-course stage may play an important role in determining nonemployed residents’ decision to look for work. Our conclusion discusses how these factors may influence labor-force participation and the relevance of our findings to housing policymakers and scholars.